• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

Lithium upgrade Coachman Pastiche 2017

I've just sold my Renault Master campervan and bought a Coachman Pastiche 2017.

I had previously upgraded the camper with an EcoWorthy 100Ah lithium battery, supported by Vitron: AC-DC, DC-DC, and 75/15 MPPT solar chargers, plus a Renogy shunt.

I'd like to try similar with the caravan since we often do 4-5 days off grid and need to be able to use our "Reich Easydriver Basic" motormover on our return.

There's a bit of a slope on my drive and the motormover is already struggling.

I currently have a 105Ah lead battery, the standard Coachman charger and a Solar Technology 10A PWM Dual Battery Charge Controller.

I'd thought to change to a 150-200Ah lithium battery which will fit in the battery compartment.

I've already ordered a Vitron MPPT 100/20 - SmartSolar Charge Controller and 500A shunt since these will improve things anyway and are simple to fit. But what next?

I’m unsure whether the current AC-DC charger will be OK with Lithium battery and since my car has a smart alternator need to think about the DC-DC charging issues.

Should I spend more on a battery with BMS or change the AC-DC charger.

Can I fit a DC-DC charger by attaching it to the permanent 12v live from pin9 of the trailer plug?

I’d be grateful for your advice.
 
I’m unsure whether the current AC-DC charger will be OK with Lithium battery and since my car has a smart alternator need to think about the DC-DC charging issues.
Not necessarily
The smart alternator on my Skoda is made non smart as soon as you connect the caravan.
It delivers 14.2v at 5 amps to my Fogstar.
Charges it fine. It's only on long journeys, 200+ miles, that the battery BMS shuts down which is not a problem for the alternator or the battery.
 
Not necessarily
The smart alternator on my Skoda is made non smart as soon as you connect the caravan.
It delivers 14.2v at 5 amps to my Fogstar.
Charges it fine. It's only on long journeys, 200+ miles, that the battery BMS shuts down which is not a problem for the alternator or the battery.
So the answer is probably buy a battery with a good BMS and forget the charger change.
 
So the answer is probably buy a battery with a good BMS and forget the charger change.
Only if the voltage is within specified limits of the battery.
I was quite prepared to add a B2B charger but tested it first. In two years the BMS has only shut charging down once and given a few high volts alarms.
I normally wouldn't rely only on the BMS but this is within its parameters.
 

TRENDING THREADS

Latest posts

Back
Top